African Horse Sickness
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Transcript African Horse Sickness
African Horse Sickness
OVERVIEW
Etiology
Species Affected
Epidemiology
Economic Importance
Clinical Signs
Diagnosis and Treatment
Prevention and Control
Actions to Take
ETIOLOGY
AFRICAN HORSE SICKNESS VIRUS
Non-enveloped RNA
Family Reoviridae
Genus Orbivirus
Nine serotypes (1-9)
All viscerotropic
Serotype 9
Endemic areas
Outbreaks outside of Africa
Serotypes 1-8
Limited geographical areas
AFRICAN HORSE SICKNESS VIRUS
Inactivated by
Heat (temps greater than 140oF)
pH less than 6, or 12 or greater
Acidic disinfectants
Rapidly destroyed in carcasses that have
undergone rigor mortis
EPIDEMIOLOGY
SPECIES AFFECTED
Equidae
Horses, donkeys, mules
Zebras
Other
Camels
Dogs
GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION
Endemic in
sub-Saharan Africa
Outbreaks
Southern and
northern Africa
Near and Middle East
Spain and Portugal
OIE DISEASE DISTRIBUTION
MAP
INCIDENCE/PREVALENCE
Seasonal
Late summer - early autumn
Cyclic
Drought followed by heavy rains
Influences insect breeding
Epizootics halted by
Frost
Lack of long-term vertebrate reservoir
Reduced numbers of vectors
Control measures
Vaccination, vector abatement
MORBIDITY/MORTALITY
Varies with species, previous immunity, form of disease
Mortality based on species
Horse particularly susceptible
Species
Mortality
Horses
50-95%
Mules
50%
European and Asian donkeys
5-10%
African donkeys and zebras
Rare
MORBIDITY/MORTALITY
Mortality based on form of disease
Disease Form
Mortality
Pulmonary form
Up to 95%
Cardiac form
50% or more
Mixed form
70-80%
Horsesickness fever
Typically recover
TRANSMISSION
TRANSMISSION
Not contagious
Vector-borne: Culicoides spp.
Culicoides imicola – principal vector
C. bolitinos
C. variipennis
Other potential arthropods
Viremia in Equidae
Horses: 12 to 40 days
Zebras, African donkeys: up to 6 weeks
CULICOIDES SPP.
Biting midges, “punkies”, “no-see-ums”
Extremely small ~1/8”
Species identified by wing pattern
Habitat
Margins of water sources
Life cycle: 2-6 weeks
Eggs hatch in 2-10 days
Females are bloodsucking
Greatest biting activity dusk to dawn
ECONOMIC
IMPORTANCE
U.S. ECONOMIC IMPACT
U.S. Horse Industry (2007)
Inventory: 4 million horses
Sales: $2.0 billion
Employment: 4.6 million Americans
Risk factors
Disease not in U.S. – naïve population
Arthropod vector is in U.S.
Outbreak would result in movement and trade
restrictions
AFRICAN HORSE
SICKNESS IN ANIMALS
INCUBATION PERIOD
Experimental: 2-21 days
Natural infection: 3-14 days
Disease Form
Incubation Period
Peracute (pulmonary) form
3-5 days
Subacute (edematous or cardiac)
form
7-14 days
Acute (mixed) form
5-7 days
Horsesickness fever
5-14 days
CLINICAL SIGNS
Four forms of the disease
Peracute (pulmonary)
Subacute edematous (cardiac)
Acute (mixed)
Horsesickness fever
Symptomatic infections most common in
horse and mules
Zebras typically asymptomatic
PERACUTE - PULMONARY FORM
Acute fever
Sudden, severe
respiratory distress
Dyspnea, tachypnea
Profuse sweating
Spasmodic coughing
Frothy serofibrinous nasal exudate
Rapid death (few hours)
Foam from the nares due
to pulmonary edema
SUBACUTE EDEMATOUS CARDIAC FORM
Edema
Supraorbital fossae,
eyelids
Cheeks, lips, tongue,
intermandibular space
Neck, thorax, chest
Not in lower legs
If animal recovers,
swellings subside
over 3-8 days
SUBACUTE - CARDIAC FORM
Terminal stages
Severe depression, colic, petechiae of
conjunctivae and ventral tongue
Death from cardiac failure
Mortality 50% or higher
Death within 4-8 days
ACUTE - MIXED FORM
Pulmonary and cardiac forms
Cardiac signs usually subclinical
Followed by severe respiratory distress
Mild respiratory signs
Followed by edema and death
Diagnosed by necropsy
Mortality 70-80%
HORSESICKNESS FEVER
Mild clinical signs
Characteristic fever (3 to 8 days)
Morning remission (undetectable)
Afternoon exacerbation
Other signs
Mild anorexia or depression
Congested mucous membranes
Increased heart rate
Rarely fatal
POST MORTEM LESIONS
Pulmonary form
Severe, diffuse
pulmonary edema
Hydrothorax
Fluid in abdominal
and thoracic cavity
Enlarged endematous lymph nodes
Hyperemia and petechial hemorrhages in intestines
POST MORTEM LESIONS
Cardiac form
Yellow gelatinous infiltrate
Head, neck, shoulders
Brisket, ventral abdomen, rump
Hydropericardium
Submucosal edema of cecum, large colon, rectum
Mixed form
Mixture of above findings
AHS IN OTHER SPECIES
Dogs
Ingestion of infected horse meat
Not usually by insect bites
No role in spread or maintenance
Dogs usually have the pulmonary form
Camels, zebras
Inapparent infection
DIAGNOSIS AND
TREATMENT
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Equine viral arteritis
Equine infectious anemia
Hendra virus infection
Purpura hemorrhagica
Equine piroplasmosis
Equine encephalosis virus
Anthrax
Toxins
DIAGNOSIS
Clinical signs
Supraorbital swelling is characteristic
History
Prevalence or exposure to
competent vectors
Travel from enzootic area
Laboratory tests - definitive diagnosis
Serotype needed for control measures
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS
Laboratory tests
Virus isolation
ELISA, RT-PCR
Serology (tentative)
Necropsy: spleen, lung, lymph node
More than one test should be used
AHSV does not cross-react with other known orbiviruses
SAMPLING
Before collecting or sending any samples, the proper
authorities should be contacted.
Samples should only be sent under secure conditions and
to authorized laboratories to prevent the spread of the
disease.
SAMPLES TO COLLECT
For virus isolation
Blood samples
Necropsy samples
Spleen, lung, lymph nodes
Paired serum samples are recommended
Store and transport samples at 39oF
AFRICAN HORSE
SICKNESS IN HUMANS
AHS IN HUMANS
No natural infection in humans
Neurotropic vaccine strains
Transnasal infection can lead to encephalitis or
retinitis
Handle modified live AHS vaccine strains with
caution
PREVENTION AND
CONTROL
DISINFECTION
Disinfectants
Sodium hypochlorite (bleach)
2% acetic or citric acid
Killed
pH less than 6
pH 12 or greater
Rapidly destroyed in carcasses that have
undergone rigor mortis
CONTROL
Quarantine
Equidae from endemic areas
Asia, Africa, Mediterranean
Minimum 60 days at point of entry
Vector control and protection
Insect repellants
Stable in insect-proof housing
from dusk to dawn
CONTROL
Monitor temperature of all equids
If febrile
Euthanize or isolate in an insect-free stable until cause
is determined
Vaccination
In endemic areas
Surrounding protection zone
Not available in the U.S.
VACCINATION
Attenuated live vaccine available
Horses, mules, donkeys
Not in U.S.
Reassortment possible
Teratogenic
No killed or subunit vaccine available
Recovering animals
Lifelong immunity post-infection
to the infecting serotype